(1) The right to vote is the most basic constitutive act of
citizenship and regaining the right to vote reintegrates offenders
into free society. The right to vote may not be abridged or denied
by the United States or by any State on account of race, color,
gender, or previous condition of servitude. Basic constitutional
principles of fairness and equal protection require an equal
opportunity for United States citizens to vote in Federal elections.
(2) Congress has ultimate supervisory power over Federal elections,
an authority that has repeatedly been upheld by the Supreme Court.
(3) Although State laws determine the qualifications for voting
in Federal elections, Congress must ensure that those laws are
in accordance with the Constitution. Currently, those laws vary
throughout the Nation, resulting in discrepancies regarding which
citizens may vote in Federal elections.
(4) An estimated 3,900,000 individuals in the United States,
or 1 in 50 adults, currently cannot vote as a result of a felony
conviction. Women represent about 500,000 of those 3,900,000.
(5) State disenfranchisement laws disproportionately impact
ethnic minorities.
(6) Fourteen States disenfranchise ex-offenders who have fully
served their sentences, regardless of the nature or seriousness
of the offense.
(7) In those States that disenfranchise ex-offenders who have
fully served their sentences, the right to vote can be regained
in theory, but in practice this possibility is often illusory.
(8) In 8 States, a pardon or order from the Governor is required
for an ex-offender to regain the right to vote. In 2 States,
ex-offenders must obtain action by the parole or pardon board
to regain that right.
(9) Offenders convicted of a Federal offense often have additional
barriers to regaining voting rights. In at least 16 States, Federal
ex-offenders cannot use the State procedure for restoring their
voting rights. The only method provided by Federal law for restoring
voting rights to ex-offenders is a Presidential pardon.
(10) Few persons who seek to have their right to vote restored
have the financial and political resources needed to succeed.
(11) Thirteen percent of the African-American adult male population,
or 1,400,000 African-American men, are disenfranchised. Given
current rates of incarceration, 3 in 10 African-American men
in the next generation will be disenfranchised at some point
during their lifetimes. Hispanic citizens are also disproportionately
disenfranchised, since those citizens are disproportionately
represented in the criminal justice system.
(12) The discrepancies described in this subsection should
be addressed by Congress, in the name of fundamental fairness
and equal protection.
(b) PURPOSE- The purpose of this Act is to restore fairness
in the Federal election process by ensuring that ex-offenders
who have fully served their sentences are not denied the right
to vote.